Most studies of gene expression in Plasmodium have been concerned with asexual and͞or sexual erythrocytic stages. Identification and cloning of genes expressed in the preerythrocytic stages lag far behind. We have constructed a high quality cDNA library of the Plasmodium sporozoite stage by using the rodent malaria parasite P. yoelii, an important model for malaria vaccine development. The technical obstacles associated with limited amounts of RNA material were overcome by PCR-amplifying the transcriptome before cloning. Contamination with mosquito RNA was negligible. Generation of 1,972 expressed sequence tags (EST) resulted in a total of 1,547 unique sequences, allowing insight into sporozoite gene expression. The circumsporozoite protein (CS) and the sporozoite surface protein 2 (SSP2) are well represented in the data set. A BLASTX search with all tags of the nonredundant protein database gave only 161 unique significant matches (P(N) < 10 ؊4 ), whereas 1,386 of the unique sequences represented novel sporozoite-expressed genes. We identified ESTs for three proteins that may be involved in host cell invasion and documented their expression in sporozoites. These data should facilitate our understanding of the preerythrocytic Plasmodium life cycle stages and the development of preerythrocytic vaccines.Plasmodium yoelii yoelii ͉ expressed sequence tag P rotozoan parasites of the genus Plasmodium are the causative agents of malaria, the most devastating parasitic disease in humans. The parasites occur in distinct morphological and antigenic stages as they progress through a complex life cycle, thwarting decades of efforts to develop an effective malaria vaccine. Plasmodium is transmitted via the bite of an infected Anopheles mosquito, which releases the sporozoite stage into the skin. Sporozoites enter the bloodstream and, on reaching the liver, invade hepatocytes and develop into exo-erythrocytic forms (EEF). After multiple cycles of DNA replication, the EEF contains thousands of merozoites (liver schizont) that are released into the blood stream and initiate the erythrocytic cycle (asexual blood stage) that causes the disease malaria. Changes in life cycle stages are accompanied by major changes in gene expression and therefore by major changes in antigenic composition. The form of the parasite best studied is the asexual blood stage, mainly because of its comparatively easy experimental accessibility. Therefore, most Plasmodium proteins that have been well characterized are expressed during the erythrocytic cycle, among them some major erythrocytic-stage vaccine candidates such as merozoite surface protein-1 (MSP-1) and apical membrane antigen-1 (AMA-1; ref. 1). Erythrocytic-stage vaccines are aimed at inducing an immune response that suppresses or eradicates parasite load in the blood. In contrast, preerythrocytic vaccines are aimed at eliciting an immune response that destroys the sporozoites and the EEF, thereby preventing progression of the parasite to the blood stage. The feasibility of a preerythrocytic v...